April 12, 2026

13 Apr

 




         


       

Week 16  Day 103 Flag Today  58°/32°                             Wind 23 mph Gusts 43 mph

Active Fire: 377 miles away Risk of fire: Extreme   Nearest Lightning: 373 miles away

Air Quality: Fair Sunshine Mostly Cloudy Very Windy

April Averages: Temps: 60°\35°

 

Weekly Observations

11-17

Black Maternal Health Week
12-18

Animal Control Officer Appreciation Week Link 
National Dog Bite Prevention Week
Link 
National Public Safety Telecommunicators (911 Operators) Week
National Blue Ribbon Week (Child Abuse)
Pan American Week

13-17

National Student Employment Week  Link
13-20

International Dark Sky Week Link
Osteopathic Medicine Week
Link

Daily Observations

International Plant Appreciation Day Link 
Make Lunch Count Day (TGI Fridays)
National Borinqueneers Day
 Link (Puerto Rico 65th Infantry)
Scrabble Day
Sterile Packaging Day
Thomas Jefferson Day

Today’s Quotes                                                                 

 



Today’s Memes

 




Today’s Thoughts

It’s spring so our town has a wind advisory. Maybe some moisture ahead.

I watch Smerconish every Saturday morning on CNN. He posed an interesting question: Does Trump act on analysis or gut instinct? It took less than a second to click on gut instinct. Most agreed with me. Then I watched his program. Now I am not so sure. Smerconish reminded us of Bill Maher’s commentary after Bill and Donald had a dinner at the White House. Maher found Trump to be friendly, cordial, and nothing like his Media Persona. The conclusion of Smerconish is that we have 2 Presidents…the Media President, and the Sitting President. The NYT had an article about how it went in the Situation Room before starting the Iran War. No screaming, no throwing things, just every military and administration member simply stating the pros and cons of bombing Iran. Sounded very normal. After long discussions, Donald decided to bomb. That sound like any sitting President. Then Media Donald went out and made his crazy announcements. I’m now wondering if Sitting President Donald believes that Media Donald is simply an act that he must do. President Trump has made some very controversial decisions that I do not agree with. I do not support Media Donald, but I have some hope that Sitting President Donald is not all bad.

The Pakistan Peace Conference concluded after a 21-hour marathon discussion ended when the American Delegation, including VP Vance, left Pakistan. Now What?

Just before the discussion, Vance was in Hungary to support Orban and made a speech to Orban’s supporters. At the time I found this disturbing. Then, this morning Orban admitted defeat and vowed to support the new President. WOW! Now what? 

Strange Historical Facts

Ancient Egyptians Used Moldy Bread as Medicine

Long before penicillin, Egyptians applied moldy bread to infected wounds. They had no idea why it worked, but they observed that it did.

Alexander Fleming’s 1928 discovery of penicillin was technically a rediscovery of something humans had stumbled on thousands of years earlier. The Egyptians, Serbians, and various Chinese traditions all had some version of this practice.

 

Oxford University Is Older Than the Aztec Empire

Teaching at Oxford began around 1096 AD and developed rapidly after 1167. The Aztec city of Tenochtitlan wasn’t founded until 1325.

When Europeans arrived in the Americas and encountered the Aztec civilization, they were already dealing with a university that had been running for centuries. It’s a useful reminder that “old” and “new” mean very different things depending on where you’re standing. 

Rebus returns

 

 FEET

 FEET


 

tuPIANOne

 

Native American Phrases That Subtly Shaped American English

Give Thanks for the Day

Many Native traditions begin and end the day with gratitude for life, nature, and community. “Give thanks for the day” is a daily practice of mindfulness and appreciation, rooted in ceremony and prayer.

People use the phrase as a gentle reminder to appreciate the present. Its Indigenous origin infuses it with a sense of ritual and connection to the cycles of life.

 

Honor Your Elders

Respect for elders remains a cornerstone of many Native American cultures, where older generations are seen as carriers of wisdom and tradition. “Honor your elders” is both an instruction and a value passed down through teachings.

The saying is often used to encourage respect for experience and history, whether in families, communities, or workplaces. Its continued use reflects a cultural debt to Indigenous respect-based values. 

Historic Events

 April in History

Rebus Answers

Two left feet                                                                                 piano in tune

Birthdays Today

Edward Fox [89 years old], British actor (The Day of the Jackal; Gandhi), born in Chelsea, London

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Billy Kidd [82 years old],, American alpine skier (World C'ship gold combined 1970; Olympic silver slalom 1964), born in Burlington, Vermont

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Al Green  (81 years old)

American soul singer ("Let's Stay Together"; "Love And Happiness"), born in Forest City, Arkansas

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Ron Perlman (76 years old)

1950 American actor (Quest for Fire, Beauty & the Beast), born in The Bronx, New York

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Garry Kasparov (63 years old)

1963 Russian chess player (world champion 1985-93), born in Baku, Azerbaijan

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Caroline Rhea [61 years old],, Canadian comedian and actress (Sabrina the Teenage Witch, Phineas and Ferb), born in Westmount, Québec

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Gone but not forgotten

Guy Fawkes (1570-1606; @35; executed)

English Catholic conspirator who was convicted in the "Gunpowder Plot" to blow up the British Parliament, born in York, England

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Frederick North (1732-1792; @60)

Lord North, Prime Minister of Great Britain (Tory: 1770-82), "who lost America", born in London

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Thomas Jefferson (1743-1826; @83)

3rd President of the United States (1801-09), born in Albemarle County, Virginia

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Eli Terry, American clockmaker whose manufacturing techniques turned clocks into everyday objects, born in East Windsor, Connecticut (d. 1852; @79) 

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Alexander Mitchell, Irish engineer (inventor of the screw-pile lighthouse), born in Dublin (d. 1868; @88)

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Josephine Butler (née Grey), British feminist and social reformer (campaigned against the slave trade and Contagious Diseases Acts), born in Milfield, Northumberland, England (d. 1906; @78)

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Frank Winfield Woolworth (1852-1919; @66, septic shock)

American businessman, retail pioneer (Five-and-Dimes; self-service display cases) and founder of F. W. Woolworth Co, born in Rodman, New York

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Butch Cassidy Robert LeRoy Parker (1866-1908; @42, gun shot)

American desperado (Wild Bunch Passage), born in Beaver, Utah

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Robert Watson-Watt (1892-1973; @81)

Scottish physicist and developer of the radar and radio direction finding in WWII, born in Brechin, Scotland

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Samuel Beckett (1906-1989; @83)

Irish novelist and playwright (Waiting for Godot, Nobel 1969), born in Foxrock, Ireland

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Eudora Welty, American novelist (Optimist's Daughter-Pulitzer 1973), born in Jackson, Mississippi (d. 2001; @92)

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Stanislaw Ulam (1909-1984; @75, heart attack)

Polish-American mathematician and nuclear physicist (Manhattan Project, H-bomb), born in Lemberg, Austria-Hungary

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Edna Lewis 'the Mother of Soul Food', American chef and author (elevated Southern cooking), born in Freetown, Virginia (d. 2006; @89) 

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Madalyn Murray O'Hair, American atheist who opposed prayer in school and was murdered in 1995, born in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania (d. 1995; @76, murdered)

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[Harold] Howard Keel, American actor, singer (Seven Brides for Seven Brothers; Kiss Me Kate), and president of the Screen Actors Guild (1958-59), born in Gillespie, Illinois (d. 2004; @85)

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Don Adams (1923-2005; @82)

American comedian and Emmy Award-winning actor (Get Smart; Tennessee Tuxedo; The Bill Dana Show), born in New York City

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Ben Nighthorse Campbell, Cheyenne-American politician (Sen-D-Colorado 1993-2005), born in Auburn, California (d. 2025; @92) 

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Lyle Waggoner, American actor (The Carol Burnett Show; Wonder Woman), born in Kansas City, Kansas (d. 2020; @84)

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Seamus Heaney (1939-2013; @74, short illness)

Irish poet and playwright (Nobel Prize in Literature 1995), born in Castledawson, County Londonderry, Northern Ireland

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Jonathan Brandis (1976-2003; @27, suicide)

American actor (seaQuest DSV - "Lucas Wolenczak"), born in Danbury, Connecticut

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…The End for today…

               

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